Italy Grapples With Priest Sex Abuse

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NICOLE WINFIELD | 09/14/09 12:01 AM | AP

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Italy

VERONA, Italy — It happened night after night, the deaf man said, sometimes in the priest's bedroom, sometimes in the bathroom, even in the confessional.

When he was a young boy at a Catholic-run institute for the deaf, Alessandro Vantini said, priests sodomized him so relentlessly he came to feel "as if I were dead." This year, he and dozens of other former students did something highly unusual for Italy: They went public with claims they were forced to perform sex acts with priests.

For decades, a culture of silence has surrounded priest abuse in Italy, where surveys show the church is considered one of the country's most respected institutions. Now, in the Vatican's backyard, a movement to air and root out abusive priests is slowly and fitfully taking hold.

A yearlong Associated Press tally has documented 73 cases with allegations of sexual abuse by priests against minors over the past decade in Italy, with more than 235 victims. The tally was compiled from local media reports, linked to by Web sites of victims groups and blogs. Almost all the cases have come out in the seven years since the scandal about Roman Catholic priest abuse broke in the United States.

The numbers in Italy are still a mere trickle compared to the hundreds of cases in the court systems of the United States and Ireland. And according to the AP tally, the Italian church has so far had to pay only a few hundred thousand euros (dollars) in civil damages to the victims, compared to $2.6 billion in abuse-related costs for the American diocese or euro1.1 billion ($1.5 billion) due to victims in Ireland.

However, the numbers still stand out in a country where reports of clerical sex abuse were virtually unknown a decade ago. They point to an increasing willingness among the Italian public and – slowly – within the Vatican itself to look squarely at a tragedy where the reported cases may only just be the tip of the iceberg. The Italian church will not release the numbers of cases reported or of court settlements.

The implications of priest abuse loom large in Italy: with its 50,850 priests in a nation of 60 million, Italy counts more priests than all of South America or Africa. In the United States – where the Vatican counts 44,700 priests in a nation of 300 million – more than 4,000 Catholic clergy have been accused of molesting minors since 1950.

The Italian cases follow much the same pattern as the U.S. and Irish scandals: Italian prelates often preyed on poor, physically or mentally disabled, or drug-addicted youths entrusted to their care. The deaf students' speech impairments, for example, made the priests' admonition "never to tell" all the more easy to enforce.

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In this predominantly Roman Catholic country, the church enjoys such an exalted status that the pope's pronouncements frequently top the evening news, without any critical commentary. Even those with anti-clerical views acknowledge the important role the church plays in education, social services and caring for the poor.

As a result, few dare to criticize it, including the mainstream independent and state-run media. In addition, there's a certain prudishness in small-town Italy, where one just doesn't speak about sex, much less sex between a priest and a child.

"It's a taboo on top of a taboo," said Jacqueline Monica Magi, who prosecuted several pedophilia cases in Italy before becoming a judge. "This is the provincialism of Italy."

Breaking the conspiracy of silence, 67 former students from Verona's Antonio Provolo institute for the deaf signed a statement alleging that sexual abuse, pedophilia and corporal punishment occurred at the school from the 1950s to the 1980s at the hands of priests and brothers of the Congregation for the Company of Mary.

While not all acknowledged being victims themselves, 14 of the 67 wrote sworn statements and videotaped testimony, detailing the abuse they say they suffered, some for years, at the school's two campuses in Verona, the city of Romeo and Juliet. They named 24 priests, lay religious men and religious brothers.

Vantini said he, too, was silent for years.

"How could I tell my papa that a priest had sex with me?" Vantini, 59, told the AP one afternoon, recounting through a sign-language interpreter the abuse he said he endured. "You couldn't tell your parents because the priests would beat you."

Vantini named two priests and two lay brothers – three of whom are still alive – but asked that their names not be printed for fear of legal action. He spoke with the nervousness and agitation he says has accompanied him all of his life from being raped as a child by a priest.

"I suffered from depression until I was 30," said Vantini, who attended the school from age 6 to 19. "My wife said it was good that I spoke out because it lifted this weight from my chest."

Vantini's one-time schoolmate, Gianni Bisoli, 60, named the same men in his written declaration and in an interview, as well as 12 other priests and brothers from the Congregation, accusing them of sodomizing him, forcing him to have oral sex and to masturbate them.

In his declaration, Bisoli also accused Verona's late bishop, Monsignor Giuseppe Carraro – who is being considered for beatification – of molesting him on five separate occasions while he was a student at Provolo, which he attended from age 9 to 15.

A diocesan probe cleared Carraro of sex abuse. But the investigation interviewed none of the alleged victims, limiting testimony to surviving members of the Congregation, other school personnel and their affiliates, and documentation from the Congregation and Verona diocese.

The late bishop's beatification process was suspended pending the investigation, but is now going ahead to the Vatican's saint-making office.

Five decades later, Bisoli still recalls the route he said he took from the institute, located on a quiet street named for the congregation's founder, Don Antonio Provolo, along the serpentine Adige river to the bishop's residence tucked behind Verona's Piazza del Duomo.

Bisoli, who became deaf at age eight, said he was accompanied by one of his abusers and walked past the red brick Castelvecchio, an imposing 14th-century citadel, then along the main Corso Cavour thoroughfare or the more out-of-the-way pedestrian shopping street Via Mazzini.

"They brought me inside the curia (the diocese headquarters)," Bisoli recalled in an interview. "There was a servant who opened the door, then someone brought me inside. It was dark."

Bishop Carraro appeared, he recalled. "The bishop started to touch me, grope me," he said, running his hands up and down his body, pulling at his shirt and shorts to demonstrate. "I pulled away. But he continued to touch me for 15, 20 minutes. I didn't know what to do."

On a subsequent occasion, Bisoli says, the bishop tried to sodomize him with a banana. Another time, they were on the sofa and he sodomized him with his finger, offering him candy to appease him, Bisoli said.

Once, Bisoli said, the bishop offered him some gold crosses that had caught Bisoli's eye.

"I said 'at least give me 10,000-20,000 lire so I can buy a Coca-Cola or an ice cream,'" Bisoli recalled.

The current bishop of Verona, Monsignor Giuseppe Zenti, initially accused the former students of fabricating their claims in talking in January to L'Espresso, a left-leaning newsweekly. Zenti called the accusations "lies" and a stunt that was part of a long-standing real estate dispute between the Congregation and the deaf students' association, to which the alleged victims belong.

But when one of the accused lay religious men admitted to sexual relations with students, Zenti ordered an internal investigation into the Congregation. The results found that some abuse occurred, albeit a fraction of what has been alleged.

According to the diocese probe, there were episodes of physical violence against two unnamed students between 1958 and 1965. From 1965 to 1967, two would-be priests with "sexual disorders" were kicked out; while between 1965 and 1990 a religious brother had sexual relations with an undetermined number of students, the investigation found. In all cases the accused were removed.

"There could have been some episodes, some bad apples are possible," Carlo de' Gresti, spokesman for the Provolo institute said in an interview at the school's Chievo campus, where a lay staff now runs a technical school for poor teens. "It happens, even in families. That there could have been 26, 27, 25 pedophiles? There is no objective corroboration from anyone who isn't inside the (students') association."

Advocates, however, says the diocese's investigation was fatally flawed because it didn't interview the alleged victims and only people with links to the school who may have something to hide.

"If they had wanted to shed full light on it, they wouldn't have only heard from priests and lay brothers, but from the deaf as well," said Marco Lodi Rizzini, a spokesman for the victims.

The investigation has been forwarded to the Vatican, said the Rev. Bruno Fasani, spokesman for the diocese. He claimed former students had been manipulated into denouncing innocent priests and accused some of harboring a long-standing animosity to the church.

Zenti, for his part, asked forgiveness from the victims.

"The feeling that prevails is above all one of profound solidarity with the victims of abuse," Zenti said in a May statement. "To them and their families, a humble request of forgiveness is made."

Among the cases the AP tallied, there were charges of inducing boys into prostitution, participation in satanic rituals, and one notorious case in which the church itself determined that an elderly Florentine priest was responsible for "sexual abuse, false mysticism and domination of consciences."

Where there were sentences, they ran from a two-year suspended sentence to eight years in jail, although with Italy's notoriously lengthy appeals process it's unclear how many have been carried out. Where civil damages were awarded, which has been rare, the amounts ranged from about euro15,000 per victim to euro150,000 (about $22,000 to $220,000 at today's exchange rates).

The cases in the AP survey involve civil or criminal cases and investigations. For that reason, the Verona figures were omitted, since no criminal or civil action is pending because the statute of limitations has expired.

In 2002, when the abuse scandal was erupting in the United States, the No. 2 official in the Italian Bishops' Conference, Monsignor Giuseppe Betori, was quoted as saying clerical sex abuse was so limited in Italy that the conference leadership hadn't even discussed the matter.

But Italian prelates and the Vatican now seem to be taking the problem far more seriously. Monsignor Charles Scicluna, the Vatican prosecutor in the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith – which handles cases of priestly sex abuse – acknowledged that public awareness of the problem in Italy had increased as a result of the "tsunami" of cases that came to light in the United States.

"There is a change of mentality, and we find that to be very positive," he told the AP.

In a shift for the Vatican, Scicluna acknowledged that priestly sex abuse was an age-old problem that needed to be rooted out.

"I don't think it's a question of happening. It has always happened. It's important that people talk about it, because otherwise we cannot bring the healing which the church can offer to people who need it – both the victims and perpetrators."

VERONA, Italy — It happened night after night, the deaf man said, sometimes in the priest's bedroom, sometimes in the bathroom, even in the confessional. When he was a young boy at a Catholic-r...
VERONA, Italy — It happened night after night, the deaf man said, sometimes in the priest's bedroom, sometimes in the bathroom, even in the confessional. When he was a young boy at a Catholic-r...
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- Meah I'm a Fan of Meah 52 fans permalink
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Denial is huge in the Catholic Church. This problem will continue until the Church allows married priests. That will not be in my lifetime.
It is a relief to no longer be a Catholic.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:52 AM on 09/16/2009
- duxguts I'm a Fan of duxguts 22 fans permalink
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Can you still buy 'pope on a rope soap'?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:22 PM on 09/15/2009
- BlueZoo I'm a Fan of BlueZoo 43 fans permalink

FYI: The reason priests do not marry in the Roman Catholic Church lies in the subject of inheritance. If a priest marries and has children but then dies, what happens to the family? Do the children of such a marriage inherit from the Church or from their Father who has taken a vow of poverty? It is an extremely complex question and one that is solved by priests not marrying.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:54 PM on 09/15/2009
- JIzin I'm a Fan of JIzin 2 fans permalink

And how does the Anglican Church solve this "problem"??
The problem is that the change has to come from inside, and why would old men who have lead repressed sexual lives allow the new priests coming in to lead sexually fulfilled lives as grown men?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:35 AM on 09/16/2009
- BlueZoo I'm a Fan of BlueZoo 43 fans permalink

Anglican priests do not take a vow of poverty or chastity. They are salaried, usually housed by their flock and generally cared for by same. Henry VIII and his Court ensured they could buy and sell their Anglican priests and also approved their being able to marry. The vows taken by Roman Catholic priests are vastly different and would have to be rescinded by apostolic authorities in order for them to marry. I really do not see that happening - ever!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:17 PM on 09/16/2009
- BassguyGG I'm a Fan of BassguyGG 4 fans permalink
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It's about time. It's time for the Catholic Church to own up to its past and confess its sins, as it has long entreated the Laity to do. Centuries of clerical misconduct have been swept under the rug, but it is only the more recent incidents that can be dealt with. The Catholic Church is probably looking at paying out millions and millions of dollars in legal settlements, but it's something that must be done. Offending clerics MUST be identified and sanctioned.

Clerical misconduct, particularly sexual misconduct, is the 500-pound gorilla in the room that Catholics don't want to talk about; especially at the Vatican. But talk about it they must, because they can't move forward until they do. It is an issue that threatens to strangle the Church worldwide.

Perhaps the dwindling number of priests will be a blessing in disguise. The Catholic Church seems to be evolving to a more Protestant model, both in their liturgy and their power structure. The Laity must necessarily take a more active role in running the church, and I believe eventually they will adopt a more Protestant model in which the Congregation hires the Pastor instead of the Pastor appointed by the Diocese to enforce their policies.

Hypocracy of the highest order and clerical misconduct are two things that personally drove me from the Catholic Church. But that doesn't mean I don't hope they enact some much-needed reforms, here and abroad.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:53 AM on 09/15/2009
- mazzetta I'm a Fan of mazzetta 9 fans permalink
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believe it or not, in Italy it's not in the news

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:42 AM on 09/15/2009

You can tell a lot about a country's powerful by the stories missing from its corporate media. In the US, Sibel Edmonds' deposition has been stonewalled. Same-same. The corporate media serves power, not truth.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:29 PM on 09/15/2009
- Academic I'm a Fan of Academic 239 fans permalink

There's a joke here I know but I'll refrain from using it, simply allude to it.

Professor Dr. Stanley Collymore.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:15 AM on 09/15/2009

These crimes of child abuse have gone on since inception. Its good that they have gotten around to uncovering the most unimaginable place, the church. This cleansing is a wonderful thing, for the victims and the perps. All the countries of the world are not exempt, they will come round because Italy is opening up. This horrendous pain for the church is hard on everyone. No human being on this planet, is totaly away from experiencing some sort of dark misbehavior from an adult, as a child. I do believe children, have a better chance to grow up in a more wholesome safe society, than was ever imagined years ago. In my life time God has opened the doors of child abuse, and allowed all perps to take a good look,at the damages they have done. Its no longer in the closet. Now children have a chance, to love and be loved,and our society will be better for it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:42 AM on 09/15/2009

what did you expect from men who wear dresses and dont get married and are insane enough to believe that nonsense too? what did you expect???

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:56 PM on 09/14/2009
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Exactly. They also get to do it tax free.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:25 AM on 09/15/2009

and this is the institution that thinks it can dictate morals and how people should live!? at what level of absurdity and hypocrisy will it be enough for people to figure it out? there is NOTHING moral about the church, any church, as sure as hell not in the catholic church. never has been. never will be. an evil wretched immoral institution is the catholic church.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:54 PM on 09/14/2009
- AnalyzeIT I'm a Fan of AnalyzeIT 63 fans permalink
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KUDOS!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:53 PM on 09/14/2009

The Let Go...Let Peace Come In Foundation is a newly formed nonprofit with a mission to help heal and support adult survivors of childhood sexual abuse worldwide. We are actively seeking adult survivors who would be willing to post a childhood photo and caption, their story, or their creative expressions to our website www.letgoletpeacecomein.org. By uniting survivors from across the globe we can help provide a stronger and more powerful voice to those survivors who have not yet found the courage to speak out. Together we can; together we should; together we NEED to stand up and be counted. Please visit our site for more details on how you can send us your submissions.

Thank you for everything you do!

Gretchen Paules
Administrative Director
Let Go...Let Peace Come In Foundation
111 Presidential Blvd., Suite 212
Bala Cynwyd, PA 19004

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:31 PM on 09/14/2009
- DD1Prime I'm a Fan of DD1Prime 5 fans permalink

This IS an opportunity for reform - when the next Pope is appointed (the current one is too much of an institutional apologist).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:21 PM on 09/14/2009

At this point, it is obvious that these are not isolated incidents. It should be apparent to any thinking person at this late date that this is about historic, worldwide, institutionalized pedophilia. One can argue that it is a result of requiring celibacy, which in itself is an absurd practice that denies an essential part of one's humanity. One can argue that the Pope should do this or that to end the abuse. But in the end, the worldwide ubiquity of pedophilia in the Catholic Church confirms that it is the system/institution itself that is the problem. And while some may argue that the Church does good deeds, it is not enough to justify the pedophilia, among other things, that goes back centuries. It won't stop until everyone involved, including high officials, are prosecuted and punished as would happen to anyone outside the Catholic Church.

I speak from personal experience because I was a seminarian for 3 years during the sixties in a setting where such practices were rampant. When I quit the seminary and began to speak out about what was happening I was threatened with excommunication. I quit the Catholic Church in disgust and never looked back. It was one of the best decisions I ever made. Those who are devout practicing Catholics need to take a long hard look at their allegiance to what is essentially an anachronistic, sexist, paternalistic, medieval if not evil, organization.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:58 PM on 09/14/2009
- MsMcgee I'm a Fan of MsMcgee 4 fans permalink
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Why would any Catholic ever leave their child alone with any priest? How many millions of episodes are not reported?

Craig, you should go public with everything you know, including names. To threaten you with excommunication is just another outrage. If everyone banded together and spoke out world wide the Catholic Church would crumble and that is what they deserve.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:39 PM on 09/14/2009
- Stokes I'm a Fan of Stokes 7 fans permalink

Consider the threat of excommunication by the false teachers of the R. C. Hiearchy a blessing from the Lord. Let the Holy Spirit of Christ continue to fill you to overflowing with His Truth.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:32 AM on 09/16/2009
- LMPE I'm a Fan of LMPE 64 fans permalink

Boy, when you hear about some of the things that have happened, John Patrick Shanley's play (and then movie) "Doubt" looks like "Sesame Street".

Why can't the Catholic Church just let priests marry?!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:29 PM on 09/14/2009
- LiberalLee I'm a Fan of LiberalLee 119 fans permalink



Oddly enough they used to let priests and even bishops do just that.
Of course then the church was plagued by nepotism to the nth degree.
As an institution, any church is doomed to be corrupted by the world it professes to want to 'save' much faster than it can 'save' anything.
And the moral hypocrisy thereby exposed merely compounds the problem.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:45 PM on 09/15/2009
- PWM I'm a Fan of PWM 248 fans permalink
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Catholic Church: Poster boy for atheism.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:12 PM on 09/14/2009
- CR46 I'm a Fan of CR46 222 fans permalink

The RCC, just another cult used to oppress, control, and abuse women and children.



A happy recovering catholic(stopped going to church 28 yrs ago, best choice I ever made)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:54 AM on 09/14/2009
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